Thursday, November 4, 2010

The Game Maker's Companion


The Game Maker’s Companion is the long-awaited sequel to The Game Maker’s Apprentice. This book picks up where the last book left off, advancing your game development journey with some seriously impressive gaming projects. This time you’ll learn how to make professional-quality platform games with solid collision detection and slick control mechanisms and you’ll get acquainted with a long-lost icon of platform gaming history on the way.

You’ll go on to discover techniques to add depth and believability to the characters and stories in your games, including The Monomyth, cut scene storyboarding, and character archetypes. This culminates in the creation of an original atmospheric platform-adventure which will take your GML programming skills to new heights. There’s even a handy reference section at the back of the book which will be invaluable for adding common features to your own games.

With contributions from four games industry professionals and a highly respected member of the Game Maker community, The Game Maker’s Companion is another labor of love that will give you even more hours of enjoyment than the original. If you already own Game Maker then you really must own this book as well.

What you’ll learn

  • Learn the fundamentals of how to create platform games with nature’s first platform game character: Fishpod.
  • Discover how to recreate the classic 90’s platform game Zool (Ninja of the Nth Dimension) entirely using drag-and-drop programming.
  • Learn how to extend and improve upon the drag-and-drop functionality of Game Maker using GML scripts.
  • Follow the design of the atmospheric platform-adventure game “Shadows on Deck” from original concept to a completed vertical slice of gameplay.
  • See how professional designers create engaging storylines with believable characters.
  • Learn how to modify the Shadows on Deck artwork to include in your own games.
  • Experience a practical journey into game development which has been unparalleled since The Game Maker’s Apprentice.
  • Gain access to professional game resources from Shadows on Deck which you are free to use in your own Game Maker games.

Who this book is for

This book is for Game Maker’s Apprentice readers, along with other game developers in general.


Author Information

Jacob Habgood

Jacob Habgood worked in the UK Games Industry for seven years, writing console games for Gremlin Interactive and Infogrames/Atari. During this time he contributed to a wide range of titles and lead the programming teams on MicroMachines (PS2, X-Box and Game Cube) and Hogs of War (PlayStation). Jacob is now a doctoral student at the University of Nottingham, researching the educational potential of computer games. As part of this research, Jacob runs clubs and workshops teaching children and teenagers how to make their own computer games, providing free activities and resources through his website: www.gamelearning.net.

Nana Nielsen

Nana Nielsen grew up in Denmark under the watchful eyes of two computer programmers; her parents. Being force fed Tolkien books and text adventures on the Commodore 64, she developed a keen interest in both stories and games, and how the two intermingle. Since then she has earned a degree in Interactive Media and worked in the games industry for more than a decade and published a dozen titles in different genres, including the platformer Crash Bandicoot: Twinsanity, the RPG Sudeki, the adventure series Broken Sword, and the sports title Virtua Tennis. She is currently working on the popular episodes of Doctor Who—The Adventure Games.

Kevin Crossley

Kev Crossley began his long career as an artist at the tender age of three, when he discovered that rather than eating poster paint, it was actually useful for painting with. It was a while before he worked out that the teachers shouted less when you kept the brush on the paper, (rather than, for example, the trouser leg of Mr. Robinson!) Nevertheless, he displayed a precocious talent for one so young, and by the age of seven he was composing vast battles between armies of Daleks and Hulked-up dinosaurs on his bedroom walls (as he still hadn't mastered the art of staying on the paper.)

Such a promising start augured well for the future, and after a distracting three years at University studying typography and how not to design stationary, he stumbled into a job as a video game artist. This was a role he enjoyed for 15 years before becoming a freelance illustrator, contributing to numerous RPG books and comics such as 2000AD and KISS4K. His book Fantasy Clip Art was published in 2006, and he writes regularly for various art magazines including ImagineFX.

His grueling work schedule is made bearable by the un-swaying support of his wonderful wife Fiona, and thanks to the example set by his two year old son Aidan, Kev’s brushes still stray from the paper...

Martin Rijks

Martin Rijks wrote his first lines of code on paper, at the age of 8, using a book from the library that he probably returned too late. Not owning a computer himself until years later, little Martin had to wait for birthday parties at his uncle's to actually be able to test his programs on a TI99/4A. When he had finally bought his own he wasted the best years of his youth dashing boulders, shooting mutant camels, raiding stars or navigating several alternate realities carrying potions while swinging pointy weapons at critters.

Martin discovered Game Maker in 2001 and ever since has kept prodding it to see what it would do. Having played an important role in building and maintaining the lively Game Maker Community, you can still occasionally find him there telling people that They Are Doing It Wrong. For fear of not wanting to go home after working hours, Martin was fortunate enough to find a daytime job that has nothing to do with game development. These days hardly ever gaming, he still likes to challenge people for a multi-player match of Duke Nukem 3D but he is unable to find anyone who is still willing to play it.

Having become a father while missing another deadline for the book, Martin is already planning to give his newborn son Dimar the same sermons he got from his own parents on the virtues of Playing Outside and Getting Some Fresh Air. This time he hopes they will work.


Download Link: http://ifile.it/ptx7z1i/1430228261.pdf

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